Abstract
Our experience at the Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh with a patient with neuroblastoma suggested that renewed elevations of urinary catecholamine metabolites may not necessarily be an indication of progressive disease. To test this possibility, we reviewed the courses of children with neuroblastoma who achieved a clinical status of "no evidence of disease" (NED), and in whom homovanillic acid (HVA) and/or vanillylmandelic acid (VMA) levels were subsequently noted to exceed normal limits initially in the presence of normal restaging studies. Five patients were identified. Of these, one had stage I, one had stage II, two had stage III, and one had stage IV disease at diagnosis. Elevations of their HVA and/or VMA levels following achievement of NED status ranged from 1 1/2 to 4 times maximal normal levels for age, and abnormalities persisted for 17 to 47 months. Only one patient relapsed, while the other four remain disease-free 8-12 years following diagnosis. These results confirm that in patients with neuroblastoma, mild elevations of HVA and/or VMA may be compatible with continuous remission.

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